Discovering a theorem is a …
im not sure how this moves the ball this isnt a logic problem per se. if you dont know if a theory is true, and you cannot because new observation can invalidate atheory at any time. how can it be reasonab le to assume at any point, that one knows a theory is ultimately true?
and since one cannot know that, one couldnt recognize it in Scripture anyway, it makes the idea that it is appropriate for G-d to include a scientific theory moot, doesnt it?
Which is still let down by the weakest link in the chain…
scientific hoaxes occur all the time. it doesnt just take the ignorant, pons and fleishman? piltdown man? and the list goes on.
thats the same weakness that any claim which one does not witness themselves suffers from, it could all be faked. take that far enough and you just wind up in the matrix.
And so you admit that your belief hinges on whether or not a chain of writers felt like souping up the story.
only in so much as the same problem applies to absolutely any historical claim. can you prove the moonlanding hapened? is your belief then not justified anyway? even though the weakest link is the fact that there is a motivation for NASA to have faked it?
further, as a metaphysician, i believe in G-d as a matter of logic, even were i never exposed to organized religion, i would still believe in the existence of a god, of some kind.
This goes for any religious society, and I’m sure you don’t think they’re all true.
Messianic Prophecy of this type is limited to Christianity.
Of course you can’t prove anything. A conspiracy theory could theoretically exist for anything. .
the moonlanding i simply more recent. give it 2000 years and see how much physical evidence survives from the moonlanding. you could make almost the same claims if you were living right after the Ressurection, in fact those similar claims are the basis of Christianity. just as people today are very sure the moonlanding happened, back then people were sure that the Ressurection had happened. even better than mere documentation or purported physical evidence, they could see the Apostles demonstrating miracles, then they saw the Apostles suffer for decades only to be martyred torturously and not recant even in the face of that.
And what about the legal effects of the magna carta. I’m sure they are still being felt, really.
and that is a very good reason to believe there was an original magna carta that actually existed. just as i think the Church is a very good reason to accept the Messianic Prophecies as true. the Church, Christianity in general is the effect of these coming true.
Ok so the various Star Trek novels are pretty good evidence of Vulcans. I’m sure there’s more than 72.
no one claims that they are factual however.
The savage does not understand a light bulb.
we actually dont need a male. we can clone from existing animals into the womb of a female. given the appropriate technology we could build DNA up from the base elements, given even more advanced technology we could cause such a thing to be done from from manipulation of the genetic material of a female. even further technology may allow it to be done wirelessly, like some form of quantum entaglement advanced to something like a star trek beaming device. it seems to me that a “virgin birth” is, simply a matter of technology so advanced that we dont understand at this point how it might be done. but i assure you, it need not involve any actual “magic”
a tribesman understands light as a flame, the sun, and lightning, not as a bulb that can be turned on and off. in the same way we understand reproduction by the forms we currently understand. not by all possible forms of reproduction.
Which is a strength, not a weakness.
for the utility of science yes it is. i like my truck, medicines, my TV, etc.
but for the idea that science is the ultimate source of knowledge, no, it demonstrates that the scientific method
the trouble comes when people think that science says anything about the biblical claims or the existence of G-d. it doesnt, but its such a common idea, that it is assumed by many before they have a chance to really think it out.
This story can be fabricated by any good author.
but any story can be.
It’s very easy to take an old book and write a new one consistent with it. That’s only one faking.
the New Testament is about 27 books actually, mostly written by different authors, at different times and places. that would require a conspiracy theory to be true.
For NASA to fake the moon landings, not only would they have to falsify video,
it was shot on a soundstage in houston according to some theories.
but make a fake shuttle, secret the astronauts out, blast off, and then secret the shuttle who knows where. That’s like 5 fakings more un-fake than yours already.
there was no shuttle during the moonlandings. they use rockets. but all that could be faked. there are people quite devoted to the idea actually.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon_landing_conspiracy_theories
im not saying they are right, im only pointing out that the claims for the moonlanding are not really any different in kind from Biblical claims. so when you asked for objective evidence to support the occurence of the Messianic Prophecy, its meaningless. there is no such thing as indisputable evidence for any historical event.
rejecting that implies a double standard of evidence. for events that we wish to be true, as compared to the ones that we wish to be not true.
in a sense of basic fairness, we need to have a level playing field for all claims. thats the point im trying to make.